New body of work from critically acclaimed British artist Jamie Jenkinson on view at Evelyn Yard

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, July 5, 2024


New body of work from critically acclaimed British artist Jamie Jenkinson on view at Evelyn Yard
Hangers, 2014. 2440mm x 1800mm 2700mm. Coat hangers, chrome railings.



LONDON.- Evelyn Yard is presenting a new body of work from critically acclaimed British artist, Jamie Jenkinson. Add New Layer, Re-present, Progressive Scan brings together a series of works which examine Jenkinson’s ongoing investigation into the field of expanded cinema, digital phenomena and cinematic cognition.

Arnie Space Race takes a genre created by the spectacular image of an actor, layering every movie he stars in, available on VHS, into one composite video. The onslaught of sound and image produces the essence of ‘Arnie’ into a sensory overload. The viewer is forced to ignore narrative and representation, and to start seeing the image as a whole, resulting in a more engaged mode of viewing.

Cinema, and Glass/Light III, both works from 2014, present, for the first time, two painterly works, which investigate the way in which one looks at the distortion of the image in cinema, video and online, both perceptually and cognitively.

Alongside these works, a new group of sculptural interventions and objects will explore the physical manifestations of digital limitations, alongside consumerist production of the video image. Here, synergies between optical and the digital processes allow the viewer to perceive objects that one encounters in everyday life with new light.

Nicky Hamlyn on Fan on Fan, 2014
‘Jamie Jenkinson’s Fan on Fan consists of a projected video image of the rotating blades of a white electric fan, projected through the rotating blades of the same actual fan. The action of the fan blades breaks up the projector’s beam into its constituent colours, which fire in a three-colour cycle at such a speed that we normally perceive them as their composite, i.e. white light. The fan blade’s moving-image counterpart, the shutter, is an essential component of the technology for shooting and projecting films, which depend on the discontinuous presentation of multiple images to sustain an illusory movement. Here the shutter, the invisible sine qua non of the technology, becomes both subject and structuring device. The fan forms the work’s subject in the image, while the actual fan’s presence threatens to destabilize that same image, partly through obscuring its projected counterpart and by breaking the light down into coloured bands. The work is circular (sic), in that an aspect of its own technology becomes its subject matter, which is then recycled via a projection system that disrupts it even as it appears to figure or reveal its functioning. The balance of elements favours the material presence of the video projector and the fan, with the modified image a tentative, albeit necessary presence, whose main function is to refer the viewer back to the precariously sustained conditions of its existence. Fan on Fan reminds us that light becomes unruly when subjected to ordering processes.’

Nicky Hamlyn is Professor of Experimental Film and Senior Lecturer in Fine Art Media at the University for the Creative Arts, Canterbury, Kent, UK, and Lecturer in Visual Communication, Royal College of Art, London. His book Film Art Phenomena (2003), is published by the British Film Institute. And he is currently co-editing, with A.L.Rees, a collection of essays on the Austrian film-maker Kurt Kren, to be published by Intellect Books in 2014.

Jamie Jenkinson is a London based artist working with video, sculpture, installation and text. He studied at UCA, Maidstone in Video Arts Production BA, followed by RCA, London in Visual Communication MA. He produces a monthly online exhibition of artist video through XVIIX.com, lectures and holds workshops up to postgraduate level. He works with artist groups including collective-iz and KU. A recent graduate of London’s Royal College of Art, Jenkinson has exhibited extensively since 2010 with recent shows including amongst others: Abstract Currents, MoMA, New York, USA; Acoustic Images, BFI, London, UK; MK Gallery, Milton Keynes, UK; A Contemporary Expression, National Portrait Gallery, London, UK, and The Future of the Poster, V&A, London, UK (all 2013).










Today's News

July 28, 2014

Richard III's new visitor centre on the site where his remains were discovered opens

Ukraine rebels go to the museum: To steal World War II tanks and two howitzers

Childhood 'behaviour book' reveals the conduct of the future Queen Victoria, aged 12

Jewish museums in Norway close after imminent terrorist attack by jihadists coming from Syria

Museo Reina Sofia shows largest retrospective held to date of the work of Richard Hamilton

Fragile adolescent beauty: Vee Speers photographs on view at Galerie Huit, Arles

NYPL explores the American home front in new exhibition commemorating the 100th anniversary of World War I

Vivid landscapes highlight Bonhams California and Western Paintings Auction

Unique handmade jewellery by Esther Brinkmann on view at Chemould Prescott Road

Museum exhibitions feature Chicago architecture, illustrate political expression

Parrish Platform features nine ecologically inspired works by Maya Lin

'The Great War: Printmakers of World War I' opens at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Design Museum Holon opens new exhibition 'Gathering: From Domestic Craft to Contemporary Process'

Solo exhibition of new works by Ross Bonfanti on view at Rebecca Hossack Gallery

The 'H' in Harlem by Bentley Meeker: Public art installation lights up Harlem

Exhibition of new paintings by Greg Miller opens at The William Turner Gallery

Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft presents 'Second Life'

Installation of work completed during the Civil Rights era by May Stevens on view at Ryan Lee

Leonel Matheu brings Crossroads of the Dystopia to the Frost Art Museum

Exhibition of emerging UK-based artists on view at Pi Artworks London

New body of work from critically acclaimed British artist Jamie Jenkinson on view at Evelyn Yard




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful